How Water Water Softeners Work

HOW WATER SOFTENERS / CONDITIONERS WORK - CONTENTS: How water softeners & similar water conditioners work, types of water softeners, basics of water softener controls. Comparing Swap-in, Manual, Twin Tank & Automatic Water Softener or Water Conditioner Features. What are the Controls on a Water Softener / Conditioner & What do They Do? What is the Water Softener Recharge or Regeneration Cycle?

POST a QUESTION or READ FAQs about ypes of water softeners, what controls are found on water softeners, & how water conditioners and water softeners actually work.

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Water softener operation: here we explain how water softeners and similar water conditioners work, types of water softeners, and the basics of what water softener controls are present and what they do. How water softeners work, methods to remove minerals from home water supply.

How Water Softeners Actually Work - Water Conditioners Operation & Ion Exchange Water Softeners

Conventional ion-exchange water softeners used to remove minerals from "hard" water in buildings usually use salt in an ion-exchange process,
swapping in sodium ions (salt) and causing calcium and magnesium to precipitate out of the building water supply (and to collect
in the water softener).

[Click to enlarge any image or table]

Definition of "hard water": Hard water is generally taken to mean water containing minerals over 121 mc (micrograms) per liter of water, or over 7 grains of hardness per gallon.

Salt in the brine tank (red arrow in our photo at left) is used to place a charge of salt molecules in the resin tank (green arrow). During a regen cycle (explained below) under control of a timer or on some systems more advanced systems that actually monitor the mineral level in the water supply.

Resin inside the water softener treatment tank (green arrow in our photo) contains salt molecules which are brought into contact with
building water as it passes through the softener. The "resin" is made of tiny plastic beads of zeolite which are coated with salt or potassium ions. (Ions are molecules that have an electrical charge.)

As hard water which is to be treated flows through the resin or treatment tank (tan arrow in our photo at left) containing the salt-coated zeolite resin beads, salt molecules (NaCl) on the bead surface are "swapped" into the water displacing other mineral molecules that we're trying to remove from the water, such as Calcium (Ca or CaCO3) or Magnesium (Mg) that clog up pipes and create other problems. The Ca or Mg ions stick to the resin beads where they have replaced the NaCL.

The resulting "conditioned water" or "soft water" (blue arrow in our photo at above left) flows out of the treatment tank and into the building for use.

In sum, during that contact time as your building water passes through salty resin inside the treatment tank, the ion-exchange occurs to soften the water.

What is the Water Softener Recharge or Regeneration Cycle?

Periodically the water softener needs to recharge itself, a step which is controlled either manually by the
homeowner or run automatically by a timer built into the water softener. Usually these steps involve pumping water backwards through the water softener and to a building drain, followed by
dissolving salt tablets or crystals in a nearby holding tank and pumping the new salty water into the softener.

During a water softener regeneration or recharge cycle two things happen:

Water is first pumped into the brine tank (the larger of the two water softener tanks in traditional installations) where it dissolves salt that is in the tank (you put it there) in the form of salt crystals or pellets.

The salty backwash water is next pumped out of the brine tank and back through the water softener treatment tank (the smaller of the two water softener tanks) where it does two more things:

The water softener backwash - regeneration cycle washes out the precipitated
calcium and magnesium which have stuck to the zeolite bead surface - thus having been removed from the water supply,

The salty backwash water passing through the water softener treatment tank it also re-charges the salt in its ion exchanger - salt molecules stick to the surface of the zeolite resin beads.

The salty water passing back through the treatment tank has given up some of its salt to regenerate the resin beads there and it has picked up the un-wanted calcium and magnesium that were previously removed from the building water as it passed through the same tank earlier. The water used during the regeneration cycle gallons is discharged through a drain tube into an approved destination like a drywell.

How often a water softener needs to backwash and recharge itself depends on two factors: how much water is used in the building and
how hard the water is.

How much salt a water softener uses at its backwash cycle depends on the hardness of the water being processed.

Reader Question: Should water actually leave the water softener during a backwash cycle?

Never used a water softener before, went to do a backwash and regenerate. Should the water actually leave the softener and then refill because it sounds as though it wants to run but no water is leaving the tank and filling back up - Jhar1986 9/19/2012

Reply: yes. Here are the details:

Jhar, reviewing from above,

Water Softener Recharge or Regeneration Cycle: Periodically the water softener needs to recharge itself, a step which is controlled either manually by the homeowner or run automatically by a timer built into the water softener. Usually these steps involve pumping water backwards through the water softener and to a building drain, followed by dissolving salt tablets or crystals in a nearby holding tank and pumping the new salty water into the softener.

During a water softener regeneration or recharge cycle two things happen:

Water is first pumped into the brine tank (the larger of the two water softener tanks in traditional installations) where it dissolves salt that is in the tank (you put it there) in the form of salt crystals or pellets.

The salty backwash water is next pumped out of the brine tank and back through the water softener treatment tank (the smaller of the two water softener tanks) where it does two more things:

The water softener backwash - regeneration cycle washes out the precipitated calcium and magnesium which have stuck to the zeolite bead surface - thus having been removed from the water supply,

The salty backwash water passing through the water softener treatment tank it also re-charges the salt in its ion exchanger - salt molecules stick to the surface of the zeolite resin beads.

So yes, water enters the brine tank, then flows back through the water softener and out it's drain during the regen cycle

Comparing Swap-in, Manual, Twin Tank & Automatic Water Softener or Water Conditioner Features

Water softeners address these two variables and is regenerated or "recharged" by these means

Offsite or "swap-in" water softeners: a water softener treatment tank is brought into the home and installed using quick-disconnect plumbing fittings. On a regular schedule a water treatment company comes by and swaps out the old treatment tank, installing a new one that has been regenerated or cleaned at their facility.

This type of water softener does not use any electricity and has no controls other than a bypass valve. (We had one in our first home, maintained by Culligan™).

Manual water softeners: manual backwash/regeneration cycle of the water softener initiated by the owner who is supposed
to notice that the water feels "hard" (can't get a lather in the shower) or as part of maintenance say when the water softener has been shut down for a week or more

Automatic regular periodic backwash/regeneration in the water softener accomplished by a clock timer
attached to the water softener

Automatic "as needed" backwash/regeneration in the water softener, controlled by a sensor in the (more costly) water softener monitors either water hardness (water hardness sensor) at the softener outlet pipe or the total volume of water used (water metering) and
backwashes (regenerates) when needed.

Twin-tank water softeners are available for installations (such as commercial) where 24-hour availability of soft water is needed. - IBC.

What are the Controls on a Water Softener / Conditioner & What do They Do?

The water softener installer sets up the water softener control to specify

How often the automatic periodic regeneration cycle should occur, such as once a week, once every other day, etc.

What time of day the regeneration cycle should occur - typically at 2AM when people are unlikely to be using water

How much water should be used during the water softener backwash - regeneration cycle - this is specified by adjusting the time-duration of the backwash cycle. Factory default is typically 10 minutes of backwash time. The cycle may be adjustable to a time ranging between 5 minutes and 30 minutes as needed. The number of gallons of water used during the water softener backwash cycle varies depending on the water pressure and flow rate in the building water supply piping.

A rough guess would be a typical volume of about 30 gallons of water (3 gpm for 10 minutes) but could be as little as 10 gallons or as much as perhaps 150 gallons (5 gpm for 30 minutes). If your water softener is running longer than 30 minutes during a backwash cycle it may not be working properly.

How much salt should be used during the water softener regeneration cycle

Some experts
suspect that many homeowners use more salt and more frequent backwashing than the water usage and hardness require.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Question: water punp runs during softener regen cycle

(Jan 17, 2013) KT said:

Should the water pump run during the entire regeneration cycle?

Reply:

KT

If the flow rate of the water softener during the regen cycle - really the latter half of the regen cycle when salty brine is being pumpd back through the water softener and out through a drain - is greater than the capacity of your well pump then the pump cannot "get ahead" of the demand for running water and the pump will run continuously.

I would expect that in the case you describe your well pump capacity, or the flow rate of your well itself is limited and that you also see continuous pump operation when you are running a bath tub at the tub spout or are running multiple plumbing fixtures at once.

Question: life of water softener resin

(Feb 17, 2013) Eric said:

Greetings. I have a Culligan Mark 10 system and the Culligan folks came out to inspect what I think is a failing valve. Sure enough they concluded that the valve is failing, but they did their typical sales thing and offered to: replace the valve with modern technology and keep the resin tank in place, re-resin the tank, and flush the brine tank. What is the life of resin? The Culligan guy said "15-20 years maximum". The system has now been unplugged for 3 weeks while we consider these options - does it take much to just start this back up if I go buy my own valve and install it?

Reply:

Eirc,

If your water softener has been out of service for some time or is old, it would be appropriate to sanitize the unit - see SOFTENER CLEANING & SANITIZING for that procedure.

The life of water softener resins is indeed limited and I agree with your Cullligan representative. But you might want to take a look at

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Technical Reviewers & References

[1] North Dakota Standards for Water Softeners, North Dakota General Authority Law, Chapter 62-04-08, Water Softener Units http://www.legis.nd.gov/information/acdata/pdf/62-04-08.pdf. "The objective of this chapter is to provide a standard of quality, capacity,
and performance for water softener units. Water softener performance
is to be based upon referee tests procedures described in section
62-04-08-09."

[3] Water Softeners, CMHC, Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation, cmhc-schl.gc.ca/en/co/maho/wawa/wawa_005.cfm - October 2008. Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation acknowledges the contribution of Health Canada to the development of this document. For further questions regarding water treatment and water quality, contact Health Canada at watereau@hc-sc.gc.ca or call 613-957-2991 or 1-866-225-0709.

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